Anticardiolipin antibodies (ACA) directed not to cardiolipin but to a plasma protein cofactor

M Galli, T Barbui, P Comfurius, C Maassen… - The Lancet, 1990 - Elsevier
M Galli, T Barbui, P Comfurius, C Maassen, HC Hemker, RFA Zwaal, EM Bevers…
The Lancet, 1990Elsevier
The binding of affinity-purified anticardiolipin antibodies (ACA) to liposomes that contained
cardiolipin or phosphatidylserine was investigated. ACA bound to these liposomes only in
the presence of plasma or serum, which indicated a requirement for a plasma component.
This component—referred to as aca-cofactor—was purified; its activity to support ACA
binding to liposomes that contained cardiolipin was not destroyed by heat (10 min at 90° C),
but was greatly diminished on incubation with trypsin. aca-cofactor bound liposomes that …
Abstract
The binding of affinity-purified anticardiolipin antibodies (ACA) to liposomes that contained cardiolipin or phosphatidylserine was investigated. ACA bound to these liposomes only in the presence of plasma or serum, which indicated a requirement for a plasma component. This component—referred to as aca-cofactor—was purified; its activity to support ACA binding to liposomes that contained cardiolipin was not destroyed by heat (10 min at 90°C), but was greatly diminished on incubation with trypsin. aca-cofactor bound liposomes that contained negatively charged phospholipid but had no affinity for liposomes that contained neutral phospholipid (eg, phosphatidylcholine); this binding was independent of calcium ions. aca-cofactor was essential for ACA to bind to liposomes that contained cardiolipin or phosphatidylserine and, when coated on a microtitre plate in the absence of any phospholipid, aca-cofactor was an apparent antigen for ACA in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. aca-cofactor is a single chain polypeptide with an apparent molecular weight of 50 kD (non-reduced), which increases to 70 kD upon reduction, and its properties closely resemble those of β2-glycoprotein I (apolipoprotein H).
Elsevier